Cyber criminals target Internet of Things devices

By Editorial Content on August 27, 2017

UK businesses were each subjected to an average of almost 43,000 cyber attacks in the first quarter of 2017, according to a report from business ISP Beaming. Most attacks (92% or 39,000) targeted Internet of Things devices such as networked security cameras and building control systems, 84% more than in the same period of 2016.

Sonia Blizzard, Managing Director, Beaming

The overall number of cyber attacks, 474 per business, per day, was 7% lower than in the same period last year (512) and around half the rate at which companies were targeted in the final three months of 2016 (1,052).

Sonia Blizzard, managing director of Beaming, said: “While it is encouraging to see that the number of cyber attacks on UK businesses has fallen, especially after the battering corporate firewalls took at the end of last year, we cannot be complacent. Businesses are still being probed hundreds of times a day by hackers and we’ve seen a threefold increase in the number of originating attackers involved in cybercrime over the last year.

“The vast majority of attacks are computer scripts seeking to take control of devices connected to the Internet of Things. Businesses are allowing suppliers inside their firewalls to provide access to devices, such as networked printers, air conditioning units and building control systems, but the holes they are making – if not done properly – can create vulnerabilities that criminals can use too. Once inside the network, hackers can take control of company assets and use them as part of a bigger hack or distributed denial of service attack at a later stage.”

She added: “Any business that is connected to the internet needs to take responsibility for cyber security at board level, review their firewall policies and make sure they are doing everything they can to ensure they don’t expose their people, assets, customers and business partners to greater risk. A modest investment in next generation firewalls, unified threat management devices and intrusion detection makes a lot of sense for most businesses today.”